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to averse
adjective
Having a repugnance or opposition of mind.
Exact(1)
We note that Mr. Warner and Mr. Hammam have been subject to averse media coverage concerning alleged corruption," the PwC report said.
Similar(57)
That's partly because there's much more risk to be averse to.
Have you known us to be averse to "pretty pointless exercises"?
However, opinion polls suggest the French public appears to be averse to reporting politicians' private lives.
— hacks," averse to "honest debate".
Not averse to taking a student (Osborne) down.
And that's something they seem uncommonly averse to do.
Thus, poor voters need to be strongly averse to inequality 8 to find spiteful choices worthwhile.
Because they are owned by their members, the institutions tend to be fairly averse to risk.
According to Violet, Shepherd was "averse to making himself known.
That solution may not appeal to gadget-averse travelers.
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